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Triage This is the lecture No. 2 Source: Manual of emergency care September 20111Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage The process of sorting patients as they present to the ED for care. Some cases need to be seen immediately, and some can wait safely. Decision based on the nurse assessment. Goal: place right patient in the right place at the right time for the right reason. September 20112Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage Triage systems: Three types identified, differ in: - Triage severity rating system - staffing - degree of assessment and documentation - extent to which triage staff initiate diagnostic and therapeutic interventions. September 20113Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage 1- Type I: Nonnurse, traffic director, receptionist greet pt, establish presenting complaint, based on that take a decision; "sick" : taken to treatment area and seen promptly or "not sick" In this system doc is minimal: name &C/C Risk: nonprofessional sort the case serious cases could unrecognized September 20114Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage 2- Type II: RN or physician performs a spot check. Take a quick look, limited information obtained, then pt assigned into3 levels: emergent, urgent, or nonurgent. It is appropriate in low admissions rate hospital, when no need for 24hr triage. September 20115Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage 3- Type III: Comprehensive, advance Experienced emergency nurse has a competency based triage orientation process. C/C, sub. and obj. data collected to support the rating decision. Initial findings documented in the record September 20116Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage Two tired triage system: Because of high load in some hospitals the system adopted First nurse: greet the pt, determine C/C, assess ABC, decide if pt. need to be seen immediately or wait. Immediate care: go to treatment room Stable case: pt chart initiated by the first nurse, document C/C then direct the patient to assessment nurse Second nurse: more detailed and focused evaluation, initiate lab work and radiology according protocols. September 20117Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage Triage severity rating system: - Two level triage: Sick: urgent care needed not sick: no immediate care required. September 20118Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage - Three level triage: Sometimes Identified by colors: red yellow and green or numbered 1-3: - Emergent: immediate care, threat to life, limb, organ. e.g: cardiac arrest, major trauma, respiratory failure. Team response needed and reassessment is continuous. September 20119Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage - Urgent: prompt care, pt wait safely several hours E.g: abdominal pain, renal calculi Reassessment needed q 30min September 201110Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage -- Nourgent: need to be seen, but not critical and patient can wait safely -e.g: soar throat, rash, conjunctivitis Reassessment needed q 1-2 hr. Poor inter and intra rater reliability between the 3 level September 201111Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage - Four level triage: Breaking the emergent level into life threatening and emergency - Five level triage: Range from level 1 most acute to level 5 acute e.g: Manchester triage system: September 201112Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage September 201113Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage The emergency severity index: It is 5 level scale categories pt by severity and resources Severity: stability of vital function and potential to threat Resources: number of resources expected to consume before discharge September 201114Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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September 201115Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage The triage process: Initial triage assessment should be within 5 min of arrivals. - Across the room assessment: Begin when the nurse see the patient, based on general appearance, decide wither immediate care needed, pt taken directly to treatment room If stable, the triage process continue September 201116Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage Observe: Airway patency, RR, external bleeding, LOC, pain, skin color, deformities, activity, clothing Listen: Abnormal airway sound, tone of voice, language Smell: Stool, urine, vomit, ketones, alcohol, infection, chemicals September 201117Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage - The triage interview: Introduce ur self, ask for C/C, HPI, based on that focused assessment of the problem and measure V/S. level determined: either go immediately to a room for treatment or to waiting room. Communication is important September 201118Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage Information seek: Who: pt demographics What: C/C Where: location of the problem & S/S When: time of symptom onset Why: precipitating factors How: how symptom affect normal function and how much September 201119Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage - Triage V/S: It is a controversial area - Objective data: Physical examination related to C/C only not system by system or head to toe examination. - Triage severity rating: Based on C/C, subjective and objective data, triage nurse use knowledge, experience and guidelines to assign severity rating. Undertriaged pt receive delayed care and risk deterioration. Overtriaged divert resources. September 201120Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage Safety and security Factors that contribute to violence: overcrowding, long waiting, violent gangs. Measures should be taken: panic buttons, restricted access doors, security cameras, police officers Monitor behavior Triage nurse shouldn’t place themselves or others at risk. September 201121Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage Triage documentation: Clear concise, support the assigned severity rating. Depend on the policy: usually there is area in the chart for triage notes. SOPIE. September 201122Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage Infection control: Triage nurse should use STD infection control precautions Hand washing between pt. It is an portal of entry for contagious diseases: appropriate precautions September 201123Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage Telephone triage: Verbal interview and making assessment of the health status of the caller by trained tel triage nurse. September 201124Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage Triage qualifications: - RN, min 6 months of emergency experience - formal triage education with supervised preceptorship - ACLS cert - Emergency nursing peds course - trauma nursing course - emergency nurse cert - effective communications, flexible - ability to use nursing process effectively - role model and representative - excellent decision making skills September 201125Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage Patient assessment: Component of the initial assessment Primary assessment: - A: Airway - B: Breathing - C: Circulation - D: Disability, AVPU (alert, verbal, pain, unresponsive) - E: Exposure/ Environmental control September 201126Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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Triage Secondary assessment: - F: Full set of vitals: Temp, Pulse, Respiration, RR, o2 sat, weight - G: Give comfort measures: PQRST for pain - H: History (S& O: C/C, HPI, medical history, meds, labs, family hx) and head to toe assessment - I: Inspect posterior surfaces September 201127Dr. Ahmad Tubaishat
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